KATZENSTEIN & COMPANY, ATLANTA, GA„ U. S. A 
Books 
To meet a steadily increasing demand we are prepared now to supply the 
best books on horticulture at publishers’ prices. 
We shall gladly obtain for you any books not shown in this list. 
Prices include delivery in U. S. A. Terms: Cash with order—no discounts. 
STANDARDIZED PLANT NAMES (1923) is becoming rapidly 
the acknowledged standard authority for all dealings in and cur¬ 
rent literature about plants in the United States. In our own 
publications we adhere strictly to Standardized Plant Names. 
Standard Edition (bound in cloth for library and general use). $ 5 00 
THE STANDARD CYCLOPEDIA OF HORTICULTURE, edited 
by L. H. BAILEY. Complete with color pages and nearly 5,000 
engravings, these volumes give complete information on kinds, 
characteristics, and methods of cultivation of all plants grown in 
North America. Ill., 3 vols, 3637 pp. 15.00 
THE NURSERY MANUAL,— L. H. BAILEY. Outlines all the 
details of successful nursery practice for both professional 
and amateur. One section describes general nursery methods, 
especially propagation practices; the other section has a complete 
list of nursery plants, with the propagation and cultivation 
methods required for each. Ill., 456 pp. 3.00 
HORTUS: A CONCISE DICTIONARY OF GARDENING,— L. H. 
& E. Z. BAILEY. Easy to use, accurate, and non-technical, 
this great book comes closer than any other single volume to 
answering every question about gardening. It includes every 
kind of ornamental, fruit and vegetable plant grown today with 
brief but complete information on their uses, cultivation, hardi¬ 
ness, propagation, preferred soil, color, identification, etc. Com¬ 
mon names are used. 5.00 
THE CULTIVATED CONIFERS,— L. H. BAILEY. The conifer 
enthusiast will find this the most complete and authoritative 
book on conifers that has vet been written. 162 Ills., 404 pages... 7.50 
THE DESIGN OF SMALL PROPERTIES,— M. E- BOTTOMLEY. 
Here are 52 carefully designed plans, one or more of which will 
give you just the planting layout you want for your home. Each 
plan is fully described and explained so that you can easily 
modify it to fit any special conditions. A check list of nearly 
600 plants showing the height, color, time of bloom, foliage, 
growing habit, soil requirements, etc., of each one shows you 
what to plant. 64 illustrations, 233 pages. 2.50 
WILD FLOWERS,— HOMER D. HOUSE. This is the first one- 
volume wild flower book to picture the flowers in actual size, in 
full colored photographs. 365 Ills., 340 pages. 7.50 
AZALEAS AND CAMELLIAS,— H. H. HUME. Every point 
about growing both of these shrubs is carefully explained here— 
soils, time and method of planting, cultivation, mulching, prun¬ 
ing, frost protection, feeding, pot and tub culture, pests and 
diseases, and propagation. 1.50 
THE CULTIVATION OF CITRUS FRUITS,— H. H. HUME. In 
a highly specialized industry such as citrus growing, new and 
practical information is essential. The author is a grower of 
long experience and his book is recognized as the best and most 
recent authority on the subject. Ill., 561 pp. 3.50 
GARDENING IN THE LOWER SOUTH,— H. H. HUME. The 
first and only complete garden guide for the South. It tells 
what flowers to plant for steady succession of bloom, how to 
have fresh vegetables throughout the year, how to grow fruits, 
what varieties to plant, what trees and evergreens grow best, and 
all about Southern soils, fertilizing, lawn making, palms, roses, 
azaleas, bulbs, bamboos, vines, and other plants. 102 Ills., 
47 2 pages. 5.00 
THE MODERN NURSERY,— ALEX LAURIE AND L. C. CHAD¬ 
WICK Contains the latest practical information on all 
phases of plant propagation, culture, and handling. Discusses 
the location and layout of the nursery, tools, buildings, soils, 
fertilizers, plant reproduction and propagation with tables show¬ 
ing the method for all plants, cultural practices, storage, packing, 
grading, office management, marketing, and nursery laws, quaran¬ 
tines, and plant patents. Contains 52 tables, 107 Ills., 500 pages, 
fabrikoid binding. 5.00 
PLANT NAMES, —T. S. LINDSAY. Give reasons for naming 
plants and explains the meaning of the names. 99 pages. 1.20 
SPRAYING, DUSTING AND FUMIGATING OF PLANTS,— 
A. F. MASON. An invaluable handbook and reference for 
fruit growers, vegetable gardeners, nurserymen and home gar¬ 
deners. 237 Ills., 570 pages. 3.00 
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